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1.
《BBA》1986,849(3):316-324
The formation and decay of antenna-excited states and the primary charge separation in membranes of the green photosynthetic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus were studied by means of picosecond absorbance difference spectroscopy. After chemical oxidation of the primary electron donor, a 35 ps excitation pulse at 532 nm produced singlet- and triplet-excited states of carotenoid and of bacteriochlorophyll a. Excitation of bacteriochlorophyll a caused a bleaching of its Qy absorption band and induced a blue shift of several neighboring bacteriochlorophyll molecules. The singlet-excited state decayed biphasically with lifetimes of about 200 ps and 1.2 ns. A decrease in the lifetime at increasing flash intensity was attributed to singlet-singlet annihilation. In the presence of active reaction centers also the primary-charge separation and secondary electron transfer were observed. The charge separation consisted of the transfer of an electron from the primary donor, P-865, to the primary-acceptor complex of bacteriopheophytin a and bacteriochlorophyll a. Electron transfer to a secondary acceptor occurred with a time constant of 400 ± 50 ps, which is about 30% longer than had been observed with isolated reaction centers (Kirmaier, C., Holten, D., Mancino, L.J. and Blankenship, R.E. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 765, 138–146). When this secondary acceptor was prereduced chemically, the lifetime of the primary radical pair increased to 10 ns or more.  相似文献   

2.
We have measured light-induced voltage changes (electrogenic events) in photosystem II (PSII) core complexes oriented in phospholipid monolayers. These events are compared to those measured in the functionally and structurally closely related reaction centers from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. In both systems we observed a rapid (< 100 ns) light-induced increase in voltage associated with charge separation. In PSII reaction centers it was followed by a decrease (decay) of approximately 14% of the charge-separation voltage and a time constant of approximately 500 microseconds. In bacterial reaction centers this decay was approximately 9% of the charge-separation voltage, and the time constant was approximately 200 microseconds. The decay was presumably associated with a structural change. In bacterial reaction centers, in the presence of excess water-soluble cytochrome c2+, it was followed by a slower increase of approximately 30% of the charge-separation voltage, associated with electron transfer from the cytochrome to the oxidized donor, P+. In PSII reaction centers, after the decay the voltage remained on the same level for > or = 0.5 s. In PSII reaction centers the electron transfer Q-AQB-->QA Q-B contributed with an electrogenicity of < or = 5% of that of the charge separation. In bacterial reaction centers this electrogenicity was < or = 2% of the charge-separation electrogenicity. Proton transfer to Q2-B in PSII reaction centers contributed with approximately 5% of the charge-separation voltage, which is approximately a factor of three smaller than that observed in bacterial reaction centers.  相似文献   

3.
The light-saturated rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii declined by approximately 75% on a per-cell basis after 4 d of P starvation or 1 d of S starvation. Quantitation of the partial reactions of photosynthetic electron transport demonstrated that the light-saturated rate of photosystem (PS) I activity was unaffected by P or S limitation, whereas light-saturated PSII activity was reduced by more than 50%. This decline in PSII activity correlated with a decline in both the maximal quantum efficiency of PSII and the accumulation of the secondary quinone electron acceptor of PSII nonreducing centers (PSII centers capable of performing a charge separation but unable to reduce the plastoquinone pool). In addition to a decline in the light-saturated rate of O2 evolution, there was reduced efficiency of excitation energy transfer to the reaction centers of PSII (because of dissipation of absorbed light energy as heat and because of a transition to state 2). These findings establish a common suite of alterations in photosynthetic electron transport that results in decreased linear electron flow when C. reinhardtii is limited for either P or S. It was interesting that the decline in the maximum quantum efficiency of PSII and the accumulation of the secondary quinone electron acceptor of PSII nonreducing centers were regulated specifically during S-limited growth by the SacI gene product, which was previously shown to be critical for the acclimation of C. reinhardtii to S limitation (J.P. Davies, F.H. Yildiz, and A.R. Grossman [1996] EMBO J 15: 2150–2159).  相似文献   

4.
The nature of excitation energy transfer and charge separation in isolated Photosystem II reaction centers is an area of considerable interest and controversy. Excitation energy transfer from accessory chlorophyll a to the primary electron donor P680 takes place in tens of picoseconds, although there is some evidence that thermal equilibration of the excitation between P680 and a subset of the accessory chlorophyll a occurs on a 100-fs timescale. The intrinsic rate for charge separation at low temperature is accepted to be ca. (2 ps)–1, and is based on several measurements using different experimental techniques. This rate is in good agreement with estimates based on larger sized particles, and is similar to the rate observed with bacterial reaction centers. However, near room temperature there is considerable disagreement as to the observed rate for charge separation, with several experiments pointing to a ca. (3 ps)–1 rate, and others to a ca. (20 ps)-1 rate. These processes and the experiments used to measure them will be reviewed.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - FWHM full-width at half-maximum - Pheo pheophytin - PS II Photosystem II - P680 primary electron donor of the Photosystem II reaction center - RC reaction center The US Government right to retain a non-exclusive, royalty free licence in and to any copyright is acknowledged.  相似文献   

5.
A detailed model for the kinetics and energetics of the exciton trapping, charge separation, charge recombination, and charge stabilization processes in photosystem (PS) II is presented. The rate constants describing these processes in open and closed reaction centers (RC) are calculated on the basis of picosecond data (Schatz, G. H., H. Brock, and A. R. Holzwarth. 1987. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 84:8414-8418) obtained for oxygen-evolving PS II particles from Synechococcus sp. with ~80 chlorophylls/P680. The analysis gives the following results. (a) The PS II reaction center donor chlorophyll P680 constitutes a shallow trap, and charge separation is overall trap limited. (b) The rate constant of charge separation drops by a factor of ~6 when going from open (Q-oxidized) to closed (Q-reduced) reaction centers. Thus the redox state of Q controls the yield of radical pair formation and the exciton lifetime in the Chl antenna. (c) The intrinsic rate constant of charge separation in open PS II reaction centers is calculated to be ~2.7 ps-1. (d) In particles with open RC the charge separation step is exergonic with a decrease in standard free energy of ~38 meV. (e) In particles with closed RC the radical pair formation is endergonic by ~12 meV. We conclude on the basis of these results that the long-lived (nanoseconds) fluorescence generally observed with closed PS II reaction centers is prompt fluorescence and that the amount of primary radical pair formation is decreased significantly upon closing of the RC.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The primary electron donor in the photosynthetic reaction center from purple bacteria is a bacteriochlorophyll dimer containing four conjugated carbonyl groups that may form hydrogen bonds with amino acid residues. Spectroscopic analyses of a set of mutant reaction centers confirm that hydrogen bonds can be formed between each of these carbonyl groups and histidine residues in the reaction center subunits. The addition of each hydrogen bond is correlated with an increase in the oxidation potential of the dimer, resulting in a 355-mV range in the midpoint potential. The resulting changes in the free-energy differences for several reactions involving the dimer are related to the electron transfer rates using the Marcus theory. These reactions include electron transfer from cytochrome c2 to the oxidized dimer, charge recombination from the primary electron acceptor quinone, and the initial forward electron transfer.  相似文献   

8.
A brief review of studies of dielectric and photoelectric properties of photosynthetic reaction centers of purple bacteria as well as photosystem I and photosystem II of cyanobacteria and higher plants is given. A simple kinetic model of the primary processes of electron transfer in photosynthesis is used to discuss possible mechanisms of correlation between rate constant of charge transfer reaction, free energy of electron transition, and effective dielectric constant in the locus of corresponding carriers.Translated from Biokhimiya, Vol. 70, No. 2, 2005, pp. 315–322.Original Russian Text Copyright © 2005 by Chamorovsky, Chamorovsky, Semenov.This revised version was published online in April 2005 with corrections to the post codes.  相似文献   

9.
A question at the forefront of biophysical sciences is, to what extent do quantum effects and protein conformational changes play a role in processes such as biological sensing and energy conversion? At the heart of photosynthetic energy transduction lie processes involving ultrafast energy and electron transfers among a small number of tetrapyrrole pigments embedded in the interior of a protein. In the purple bacterial reaction center (RC), a highly efficient ultrafast charge separation takes place between a pair of bacteriochlorophylls: an accessory bacteriochlorophyll (B) and bacteriopheophytin (H). In this work, we applied ultrafast spectroscopy in the visible and near-infrared spectral region to Rhodobacter sphaeroides RCs to accurately track the timing of the electron on BA and HA via the appearance of the BA and HA anion bands. We observed an unexpectedly early rise of the HA band that challenges the accepted simple picture of stepwise electron transfer with 3 ps and 1 ps time constants. The implications for the mechanism of initial charge separation in bacterial RCs are discussed in terms of a possible adiabatic electron transfer step between BA and HA, and the effect of protein conformation on the electron transfer rate.  相似文献   

10.
A number of the electrogenic reactions in photosystem I, photosystem II, and bacterial reaction centers (RC) were comparatively analyzed, and the variation of the dielectric permittivity (ε) in the vicinity of electron carriers along the membrane normal was calculated. The value of ε was minimal at the core of the complexes and gradually increased towards the periphery. We found that the rate of electron transfer (ET) correlated with the value of the dielectric permittivity: the fastest primary ET reactions occur in the low-polarity core of the complexes within the picosecond time range, whereas slower secondary reactions take place at the high-polarity periphery of the complexes within micro- to millisecond time range. The observed correlation was quantitatively interpreted in the framework of the Marcus theory. We calculated the reorganization energy of ET carriers using their van der Waals volumes and experimentally determined ε values. The electronic coupling was calculated by the empirical Moser-Dutton rule for the distance-dependent electron tunneling rate in nonadiabatic ET reactions. We concluded that the local dielectric permittivity inferred from the electrometric measurements could be quantitatively used to estimate the rate constant of ET reactions in membrane proteins with resolved atomic structure with the accuracy of less than one order of magnitude.  相似文献   

11.
Based on comparative analysis, it is shown that the electron transfer theory traditionally used in biophysics is often unable to explain the electron transfer regularities observed in biological molecular systems. The data for seven electron transfer reactions (direct and reverse) that occur in bacterial photosynthetic reaction centers (mainly, purple bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides) have been analyzed. Conceivable reasons for the discrepancy between the theoretical and experimental data are discussed and some approaches to overcoming this contradiction are offered.  相似文献   

12.
We compared the temperature dependency of the rate of the charge recombination reaction in photoreaction centers isolated from Ectothiorhodospira sp. and from Rhodospirillum rubrum G9. We also examined the temperature dependency of the bandwidth and peak wavelength of their far-red absorption band. In both preparations, the peak wavelength and the bandwidth vary monotonically with temperature between 80 and 300 K. However, the rate of the charge recombination reaction has a quite different temperature dependency. In the preparation from R. rubrum, the reaction is accelerated 5-fold in a typical sigmoidal fashion as the temperature is lowered from 300 to 80 K. In the preparation from Ectothiorhodospira sp., the reaction is accelerated monotonically only about 1.5-fold in the same temperature range. At temperatures below 100 K, the rates are similar in the two preparations. We interpret the temperature dependency of the charge recombination reaction in terms of an activationless electron-transfer model formulated by Jortner (Jortner, J. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 394, 193–230). The minimal model provides a good fit for the temperature dependency of charge recombination in the preparation from Ectothiorhodospira sp. However, to fit the temperature dependency of the R. rubrum preparation with the same model, we must further postulate that the electronic coupling factor varies with temperature in this preparation. We find that, in both preparations, the temperature dependency of the far-red absorption bandwidth is consistent with the assumption that similar vibrational modes are involved in electron transfer and in electronic excitation.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The kinetics of electron transfer from cytochrome c2 to the primary donor (P) of the reaction center from the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides have been investigated by time-resolved absorption spectroscopy. Rereduction of P+ induced by a laser pulse has been measured at temperatures from 300 K to 220 K in a series of specifically mutated reaction centers characterized by altered midpoint redox potentials of P+/P varying from 410 mV to 765 mV (as compared to 505 mV for wild type). Rate constants for first-order electron donation within preformed reaction center–cytochrome c2 complexes and for the bimolecular oxidation of free cytochrome c2 have been obtained by multiexponential deconvolution of the kinetics. At all temperatures the rate of the fastest intracomplex electron transfer increases by more than two orders of magnitude as the driving force −ΔG° is varied over a range of 350 meV. The temperature and ΔG° dependences of the rate constant fit the Marcus equation well. Global analysis yields a reorganization energy λ = 0.96 ± 0.07 eV and a set of electronic matrix elements, specific for each mutant, ranging from 1.2 10−4 eV to 2.5 10−4 eV. Analysis in terms of the Jortner equation indicates that the best fit is obtained in the classical limit and restricts the range of coupled vibrational modes to frequencies lower than ∼200 cm−1. An additional slower kinetic component of P+ reduction, attributed to electron transfer from cyt c2 docked in a nonoptimal configuration of the complex, displays a Marcus type dependence of the rate constant upon ΔG°, characterized by a similar value of λ (0.8 ± 0.1 eV) and by an average electronic matrix element smaller by more than one order of magnitude. In all of the mutants, as the temperature is decreased below 260 K, both intracomplex reactions are abruptly inhibited, their rate being negligible at 220 K. The free energy dependence of the second-order rate constant for oxidation of cyt c2 in solution suggests that the collisional reaction is partially diffusion controlled, reaching the diffusion limit at exothermicities between 150 and 250 meV over the temperature range investigated.  相似文献   

15.
The stepwise synthesis and assembly of photosynthetic membrane components in the y-1 mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardi have been previously demonstrated (Ohad 1975 In Membrane Biogenesis, Mitochondria, Chloroplasts and Bacteria, Plenum, pp 279-350). This experimental system was used here in order to investigate the process of formation and interconnection of the energy collecting chlorophylls with the reaction centers of both photosystems I and II. The following measurements were carried out: photosynthetic electron flow at various light intensities, including parts or the entire electron transfer chain; analysis of the kinetics of fluorescence emission at room temperature and fluorescence emission spectra at 77 K, and electrophoretic separation of membrane polypeptides and chlorophyll protein complexes. Based on the data obtained it is concluded that: (a) each photosystem (PSI and PSII) contains, in addition to the reaction center, an interconnecting antenna and a main or light harvesting antenna complex; (b) the formation of the light harvesting complex, interconnecting antenna, and reaction centers for each photosystem can occur independently. (c) the interconnecting antennae link the light harvesting complexes with the respective reaction centers. In their absence, energy transfer between the light harvesting chlorophylls and the reaction centers is inefficient. The formation of the interconnecting antennae and efficient assembly of photosystem components occur simultaneously with the de novo synthesis of chlorophyll and at least three polypeptides, one translated in the cytoplasm and two translated in the chloroplast. The synthesis of these polypeptides was found to be light dependent.  相似文献   

16.
Chromatophores of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum and isolated reaction centers were labeled with the lipophilic membrane marker 5-[125I]iodonaphthyl-1-azide. The two smaller reaction center proteins L and M bind more label than the larger subunit H, a fact supporting the proposed localisation of the 3 subunits obtained with hydrophilic labels. Besides these integral proteins the lipids, among them mainly the pigments and the quinones, are highly labeled suggesting a hydrophobic environment around these molecules and a preferred reactivity to iodonaphthylazide. Such a hydrophobic environment may be of great importance for the function of the photosynthetic reaction centers especially for the charge separation and the primary reactions in electron transport.  相似文献   

17.
Effects of extraction of the H-subunit from Rhodobacter sphaeroides photosynthetic reaction centers (RC) on the characteristics of the photoinduced conformational transition associated with electron transfer between photoactive bacterio-chlorophyll and primary quinone acceptor were studied. Extraction of the H-subunit (i.e., the subunit that is not directly bound to electron transfer cofactors) was found to have a significant effect on the dynamic properties of the protein–pigment complex of the RC, the effect being mediated by modification of parameters of the relaxation processes associated with charge separation.  相似文献   

18.
This review presents a broad overview of the research that enabled the structure determination of the bacterial reaction centers from Blastochloris viridis and Rhodobacter sphaeroides, with a focus on the contributions from Duysens, Clayton, and Feher. Early experiments performed in the laboratory of Duysens and others demonstrated the utility of spectroscopic techniques and the presence of photosynthetic complexes in both oxygenic and anoxygenic photosynthesis. The laboratories of Clayton and Feher led efforts to isolate and characterize the bacterial reaction centers. The availability of well-characterized preparations of pure and stable reaction centers allowed the crystallization and subsequent determination of the structures using X-ray diffraction. The three-dimensional structures of reaction centers revealed an overall arrangement of two symmetrical branches of cofactors surrounded by transmembrane helices from the L and M subunits, which also are related by the same twofold symmetry axis. The structure has served as a framework to address several issues concerning bacterial photosynthesis, including the directionality of electron transfer, the properties of the reaction center-cytochrome c 2 complex, and the coupling of proton and electron transfer. Together, these research efforts laid the foundation for ongoing efforts to address an outstanding question in oxygenic photosynthesis, namely the molecular mechanism of water oxidation.  相似文献   

19.
The development of functional photosynthetic units in Rhodobacter sphaeroides was followed by near infra-red fast repetition rate (IRFRR) fluorescence measurements that were correlated to absorption spectroscopy, electron microscopy and pigment analyses. To induce the formation of intracytoplasmic membranes (ICM) (greening), cells grown aerobically both in batch culture and in a carbon-limited chemostat were transferred to semiaerobic conditions. In both aerobic cultures, a low level of photosynthetic complexes was observed, which were composed of the reaction center and the LH1 core antenna. Interestingly, in the batch cultures the reaction centers were essentially inactive in forward electron transfer and exhibited low photochemical yields FV/FM, whereas the chemostat culture displayed functional reaction centers with a rather rapid (1-2 ms) electron transfer turnover, as well as a high FV/FM of ∼0.8. In both cases, the transfer to semiaerobiosis resulted in rapid induction of bacteriochlorophyll a synthesis that was reflected by both an increase in the number of LH1-reaction center and peripheral LH2 antenna complexes. These studies establish that photosynthetic units are assembled in a sequential manner, where the appearance of the LH1-reaction center cores is followed by the activation of functional electron transfer, and finally by the accumulation of the LH2 complexes.  相似文献   

20.
《BBA》1985,807(1):24-34
Picosecond absorbance difference spectra at a number of delay times after a 35 ps excitation flash and kinetics of absorbance changes were measured of the membrane vesicle preparation Complex I from the photosynthetic green sulfur bacterium Prosthecochloris aestuarii. After chemical oxidation of the primary donor the excitation pulse produced singlet and triplet excited states of carotenoid and bacteriochlorophyll a. With active reaction centers present also the flash-induced primary charge separation and subsequent electron transfer were observed. The singlet excited state of the carotenoid, formed by direct excitation at 532 nm, is characterized by an absorbance band peaking at 590 nm. Its average lifetime was calculated to be about 1 ps. Excited singlet states of bacteriochlorophyll a were characterized by a bleaching of their ground state Qy absorption bands. Singlet excited states, localized on the so-called core complex, were produced by energy transfer from excited carotenoid. Their lifetime was about 70 ps. A decay component of about 280 ps was ascribed to singlet excited bacteriochlorophyll a in the bacteriochlorophyll a protein. These singlet excitations were partly converted to the triplet state. With active reaction centers, oxidation of the primary donor, P-840, characterized by the bleaching of its Qy and Qx absorption bands, was observed. This oxidation was accompanied by a bleaching between 650 and 680 nm and an absorbance increase between 680 and 750 nm. These changes, presumably due to reduction of bacteriopheophytin c (Van Bochove, A.C., Swarthoff, T., Kingma, H., Hof, R.M., Van Grondelle, R., Duysens, L.N.M. and Amesz, J. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 764, 343–346), were attributed to the reduction of the primary electron acceptor. Electron transfer to a secondary acceptor occurred with a time-constant of 550 ± 50 ps. Since no absorbance changes due to reduction of this acceptor were observed in the red or infrared region, we tentatively assume that this acceptor is an iron-sulfur center.  相似文献   

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